Traditional user interfaces can rely on this interface to define the
foundations of typical desktops. Currently it's possible to set up
background, panels and locking surfaces.
The surface set by this request will receive a fake
pointer.enter event during grabs at position 0, 0 and is
expected to set an appropriate cursor image as described by
the grab_cursor event sent just before the enter event.
Tell the shell we want it to create and set the lock surface, which is
a GUI asking the user to unlock the screen. The lock surface is
announced with 'set_lock_surface'. Whether or not the shell actually
implements locking, it MUST send 'unlock' request to let the normal
desktop resume.
This event will be sent immediately before a fake enter event on the
grab surface.
Tell the server, that enough desktop elements have been drawn
to make the desktop look ready for use. During start-up, the
server can wait for this request with a black screen before
starting to fade in the desktop, for instance. If the client
parts of a desktop take a long time to initialize, we avoid
showing temporary garbage.
Tell the shell which side of the screen the panel is
located. This is so that new windows do not overlap the panel
and maximized windows maximize properly.
Only one client can bind this interface at a time.
A screensaver surface is normally hidden, and only visible after an
idle timeout.